Author:Walter Scott

One of the BBC's '100 Novels That Shaped Our World'
The Penguin English Library Edition of Ivanhoe by Walter Scott
'Fight on, brave knights! Man dies, but glory lives!'
Banished from England for seeking to marry against his father's wishes, Ivanhoe joins Richard the Lion Heart on a crusade in the Holy Land. On his return, his passionate desire is to be reunited with the beautiful but forbidden lady Rowena, but he soon finds himself playing a more dangerous game as he is drawn into a bitter power struggle between the noble King Richard and his evil and scheming brother John. The first of Scott's novels to address a purely English subject, Ivanhoe is set in a highly romanticized medieval world of tournaments and sieges, chivalry and adventure where dispossessed Saxons are pitted against their Norman overlords, and where the historical and fictional seamlessly merge.
The Penguin English Library - 100 editions of the best fiction in English, from the eighteenth century and the very first novels to the beginning of the First World War.
I have long been a fan of Geling Yan's fiction for its power to disturb us out of our ordinary worlds. She is a writer of importance. In spare and unsentimental prose, she shows us the human condition in extreme times. The Flowers of War is yet another accomplished and riveting tale that touches us at the center of our being.
—— Amy TanYan masterfully depicts bubbling tensions...testament to the bravery of women in the most horrifying of circumstances...(beautifully translated by Nicky Harman)
—— Clarissa Sebag-Montefiore , IndependentThe novel is rewarding for its spare prose and subtle treatment of the conflicts, quarrels, racial ambiguities and acts of transcendent heroism woven into the story... There are doomed love stories, amid the tragedies, but they are drawn from a deeper well and speak to the persistence of humanity in the grimmest of circumstances
—— Isabel Hilton , GuardianPowerful and poignant
—— Press AssociationGreat storytelling
—— ObserverIntensely cinematic
—— Big IssueDeft exploration of the wondrous and sad inscrutability of the human heart.
—— New York TimesYan is a keen observer of the cruel and the magical, and has a fine sense of the permeable line between high hilarity and Kafkan nightmare.
—— Waterbridge ReviewMasterful
—— Lancashire Evening PostMasterful novel… Spare, beautifully understated prose…
—— Pam Norfolk , UK Regional Press SyndicationBlurs fact and fiction with aplomb… Royle’s novel is a sharp portrait of a man going very wrong.
—— Ben Felsenburg , MetroExtremely good.
—— John Burnside , The TimesDazzling… Royle attended last year’s Man Booker Prize ceremony as editor of one of the shortlisted titles, Alison Moore’s The Lighthouse… I wouldn’t bet against Royle having to dry-clean the tux on his own account next time.
—— Anthony Cummins , Sunday TelegraphRoyle’s coup is to deliver the pithy sting of a good short story many times over the course of a whole novel.
—— Claire Lowdon , New StatesmenI admired it so much and wanted to go back and see how it was all put together. His book absolutely enchanted me.
—— Jenn Ashworth , IndependentThis may be a tricksily metafictional novel but Royle hasn’t forgotten his readers.
—— Stephanie Cross , Daily Mail5 stars, gripping, innovative and fluent.
—— BookmebookblogNicholas Royle has produced the holy grail: a literary page-turner. Although it’s published in January, I’ll be astonished if it doesn’t make the short list of many a prize at the end of the year.
—— BookmunchA strange, unsettling brew that simply entertains at first before revealing darker and more dangerous depths as it progresses; a dark and delicious treat for lovers of literary fiction who like to have their grey cells tickled.
—— JustwilliamsluckA vertiginous murder mystery with echoes of JG Ballard, David Lodge and Alain Robbe-Grillet
—— Sunday TelegraphIf writing about creative writing is to risk a novel eating itself, we can be thankful that a writer of Royle's skills put himself in charge of the banquet
—— Gerard Woodward , GuardianA brilliant, eerie mix of campus meta-novel, whodunnit, failed-love story and existential contemplation
—— Peter J. Smith , Times Higher EducationThis just might be the exceptional book which should be judged by its cover
—— Liam Heylin , Irish ExaminerAn ingenious tale
—— ObserverCleverly metafictional, humorously perverse, and impressively original
—— Courtney Garner , Yorker